AU726789B2 - Arrangement and method for generating coded high-frequency signals - Google Patents

Arrangement and method for generating coded high-frequency signals Download PDF

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Publication number
AU726789B2
AU726789B2 AU67171/98A AU6717198A AU726789B2 AU 726789 B2 AU726789 B2 AU 726789B2 AU 67171/98 A AU67171/98 A AU 67171/98A AU 6717198 A AU6717198 A AU 6717198A AU 726789 B2 AU726789 B2 AU 726789B2
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Prior art keywords
frequency
arrangement
arrangement according
energy
electrical energy
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AU6717198A (en
Inventor
Wolf-Eckhart Bulst
Horst Gerlach
Franz Kammerl
Thomas Ostertag
Frank Schmidt
Gerd Scholl
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Siemens AG
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Siemens AG
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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/06Receivers
    • H04B1/16Circuits
    • H04B1/1607Supply circuits
    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08CTRANSMISSION SYSTEMS FOR MEASURED VALUES, CONTROL OR SIMILAR SIGNALS
    • G08C17/00Arrangements for transmitting signals characterised by the use of a wireless electrical link
    • G08C17/02Arrangements for transmitting signals characterised by the use of a wireless electrical link using a radio link
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01HELECTRIC SWITCHES; RELAYS; SELECTORS; EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE DEVICES
    • H01H2239/00Miscellaneous
    • H01H2239/076Key stroke generating power
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02NELECTRIC MACHINES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H02N2/00Electric machines in general using piezoelectric effect, electrostriction or magnetostriction
    • H02N2/18Electric machines in general using piezoelectric effect, electrostriction or magnetostriction producing electrical output from mechanical input, e.g. generators
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/02Transmitters
    • H04B1/04Circuits
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10NELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10N15/00Thermoelectric devices without a junction of dissimilar materials; Thermomagnetic devices, e.g. using the Nernst-Ettingshausen effect
    • H10N15/10Thermoelectric devices using thermal change of the dielectric constant, e.g. working above and below the Curie point

Abstract

An apparatus and method for generating coded high-frequency signals, having a converter, which converts non-electrical primary energy available from the surroundings into electrical energy, an element with a nonlinear characteristic curve, which is coupled to the converter, and a coding device coupled to the element with a nonlinear characteristic curve.

Description

GR 97 P 1152 1 Description Arrangement and method for generating coded highfrequency signals It is known to generate high-frequency energy and signals with the aid of low-frequency electrical energy, e.g. (battery) direct current, power supply frequency current and similar energy from similar energy sources. Radio-frequency transmitters fed from the power supply and battery-driven RF transmitters such as radio transceivers, mobile telephones or cordless telephones are widely known. Such apparatuses enable non-coded, but preferably coded/modulated highfrequency signals to be emitted for diverse radio information transmissions. For the cases of battery operation, solar energy may also be used as primary energy source, with the aid of which, given the presence of sufficient illumination, a rechargeable battery or an accumulator can be recharged or kept in its charge state.
It is also known for physical and similar data, measurement variables, etc., to be interrogated remotely. One example of such remote interrogation is, for example, a remote thermometer by means of which the temperature, e.g. of a hot boiler, is measured and displayed at a location remote from the boiler. For this purpose, a remote thermometer that operates purely electrically has a two-core electrical line between the temperature-sensitive sensor and the actual display device.
Equipment which can be interrogated remotely and in which the connection between sensor and display device is a radio transmission are also known. Although the data transmission takes place in a wirefree manner, a source for electrical energy is nevertheless necessary at the location of the sensor, namely for the transmitter. If the connection is intended to be completely wirefree, electrical battery energy feeding la is used, therefore, at the location GR 97 P 1152 2 of the data interrogation (unless an electrical source is otherwise available there). Furthermore, equipment which can be interrogated remotely without an electrical supply at the sensor are known, in the case of which the energy necessary for the data transmission is coupled in a wirefree manner, by means of a correspondingly high-energy and broadband interrogation pulse, into a surface wave device, from where it is sent back passively after suitable signal processing.
What is disadvantageous about this, however, is the fact that the high-energy interrogation pulse has to be emitted regularly and all the more often the more accurately the measurement variable is to be determined or observed.
The object of the present invention is to specify, for a relatively specific operating case, advantageously applicable generation of the electrical energy necessary for such a transmitter. This relatively specific operation consists in carrying out a radio information transmission only in merely relatively short time intervals of interest, the length of a respective time interval of this type being short only 1 thousandth or less) relative to the pauses between such successive time intervals.
This object is achieved by means of an arrangement in accordance with Claim 1. Advantageous refinements and also a method for generating coded high-frequency signals emerge from further claims.
The invention is based on the concept, preferably from the viewpoint of reducing the technical outlay and also of minimized maintenance, of finding a principle which enables a completely sufficient radio information transmission for the respective case, with energy other than electrical primary energy being expended.
In advance of the descriptions of individual examples, the principle underlying the invention shall L be briefly delineated, GR 97 P 1152 -3 those parts of the description which then follow serving to provide a more in-depth understanding of said principle.
The case of photovoltaic conversion has already been mentioned, which, however, as is known and evident, can be made usable only to a limited extent.
It is dependent on sufficient incidence of light and can usually be used reasonably only in conjunction with energy storage elements accumulators.
The invention is geared to using energy that is available, occasionally even in a very large quantity, said energy being referred to here as primary energy available from the surroundings, in order to provide electrical energy for generating a high-frequency signal (radio signal) in accordance with the invention.
Such primary energies that are usually not used are mechanical deformation energy, in particular pressure or other forces, friction forces (lowtemperature) thermal energy, acceleration forces, radiation, oscillating masses and the like. Insofar as forces are referred to here, their temporal or local gradient is used for the invention, said gradient being equivalent to an energy.
Examples of previously unused primary energies that may be [lacuna] are the pressure/deformation energy fundamentally necessary for actuating an electrical switch, heat, e.g. from a radiator, that is available with a spatial or temporal temperature gradient and acceleration energy of an oscillating seismic mass, e.g. in a vehicle. Other suitable primary energies are shaking, vibrating, air movements, this exemplary enumeration is not exhaustive in relation to the invention and must in no way be seen as a restriction of the application of the principle of the invention.
The integral principle of the invention essentially consists in tapping off a proportion of energy from such process energy GR 97 P 1152 4 and converting said proportion of energy firstly into low-frequency electrical energy as defined here. In the most general form, according to the invention this is understood to mean in the first instance the separation of charges, as arises e.g. as electrostatic charging due to friction. According to the invention, the generation of a voltage having a slowly rising amplitude is also understood to be low-frequency. The voltage generated in pyroelectric or piezoelectric and also in photovoltaic components can also be used in accordance with the invention.
A next step is to transform this so-called lowfrequency electrical energy into high-frequency electrical energy. For this purpose, an element with a nonlinear characteristic curve (nonlinear element) may be used in accordance with the invention. In the sense of the invention this is understood to mean an element whose behavior changes abruptly as a function of the applied voltage starting from a specific limit value or in a limit value range. As a result, such an element generates a current pulse with a steep edge, which corresponds to a high-frequency signal in the frequency domain.
Depending on the bandwidth of this highfrequency signal, it may be necessary to filter out a narrower-band frequency spectrum from said signal.
However, it is also possible to use a nonlinear element which already generates a sufficiently narrowband highfrequency signal by itself. This enables the full energy content of the high-frequency signal to be used.
A further step of the invention is to code this high-frequency electrical energy with an information item and emit it as coded (narrowband) high-frequency signal. This coding may be suitable for identification purposes and/or also contain other information items, e.g. concerning the nature and size of parameters acting on the coding device. These may be specific physical quantities such as, for instance, a temperature, a force or a sudden impedance change, GR 97 P 1152 5 but equally chemical or biological parameters as well, e.g. concentration and/or nature of gases, vapors, liquids, substances or biological material such as e.g.
viruses or genes.
A coded high-frequency signal is emitted, whose energy content, with narrowband selection being performed if appropriate, is necessarily relatively low but, nevertheless, sufficiently large within the scope of application of the invention. It is surprising that, in spite of a low degree of conversion of the primary energy used into the energy of the coded high-frequency signal that is generated, there is no problem at all with respect to the beneficial application of the invention.
In this respect, it should supplementarily be pointed out that the radio receiving station (positioned at an appropriately limited distance) is designed and configured in a manner known per se such that it can detect the information of the received (coded) narrowband high-frequency signal. This is not a problem at the radio receiving end because the energy supply of the receiver can be ensured there in a conventional manner, e.g. by means of an electricity power supply, batteries or the like.
The further explanations/descriptions of exemplary embodiments/applications and of the associated figures serve to provide an in-depth understanding of the invention.
Figure 1 shows a block diagram of the energy flow.
Figure 2 shows the principle of a structure.
Figure 3 shows an integrated structure in a schematic plan view Figures 4a and 4b show two embodiments of an integrated structure in a side view (schematic sectional diagram).
GR 97 P 1152 6 Figures 1 and 2: in accordance with the block diagram according to Figure 1, a converter 10 is provided, which converts (the) respectively available process energy into electrical energy. Examples of such a converter 10 are a piezoelectric element for converting pressure/deformation energy, a pyroelectric body, a thermoelement pair, an element having the Seebeck/Peltier effect or the like for the transformation of thermal energy with a temperature gradient, an electrodynamic or piezoelectric system for converting oscillation/acceleration change energy into said (electrical) energy defined as low-frequency (for all these examples here). Solar cells are also suitable. It is also possible to use a friction element as the converter in the case of which the friction between two differently charging materials generates an electrostatic voltage as low-frequency energy.
The magnitude of the required voltage depends on the nonlinear element and extends from a few hundred to thousand volts for a spark gap through a few ten to twenty volts for semiconductor components down to a few volts, as are sufficient for relays.
11 designates a nonlinear element. It serves to transform this so-called low-frequency energy into high-frequency energy with the inclusion of an inner switching operation for triggering a transition taking place at time intervals of stored lowfrequency energy into energy which then assumes/has assumed high-frequency property. Examples of such a nonlinear element are, in particular, a spark gap, or a gas discharge tube. Also suitable is a diode with a varactor or avalanche effect, for example, or a thyristor or a similarly acting semiconductor component. Also suitable in principle are switches or relays which are suitable for switching the in some instances small currents of the low-frequency GR 97 P 1152 7 electrical energy and exhibit a corresponding nonlinear behavior. Silicon microrelays and relays with a piezoelectric reed may be mentioned here by way of example.
A multiplicity of arrangements are appropriate as the coding device 12 with, if appropriate, an additional filter property. Arrangements which operate with surface waves (SW/SAW), shear waves or bulk waves near the surface are particularly suitable for this.
These may be resonator arrangements or, if appropriate, dispersive or tapped delay lines. Electroacoustic transducers are also generally suitable, as are dielectric filters, mechanical filters, coaxial ceramic filters, bulk oscillators e.g. quartz oscillators or LC resonant circuit filters or the like. Particularly suitable piezoelectric materials for such electroacoustic transducers are lithium niobate, lithium tantalate, quartz, Li 2
B
4 07 or langasit (lanthanum-gallium-silicon oxide).
Electroacoustic transducers with pulse compression (spread spectrum communication or broadband coding methods) can also advantageously be used as the coding device. These allow the coded HF signal to be transmitted in a manner which is particularly immune to interference and is thus protected against natural
(RF)
interference or against intentional unauthorized influencing of the coded signal. These are e.g. said dispersive or tapped delay lines.
The high-frequency signal may lie in any desired frequency range which is known or suitable for radio transmission and can be generated using said filters or coding devices, e.g. from a few kilohertz up to several gigahertz.
Specific, practically applicable embodiments with respect to the invention are described below.
A
first embodiment GR 97 P 1152 8in accordance with Figure 2 can be used e.g. as a switch for switching on an apparatus, lighting and the like. A very interesting application example is the light switch in rooms, with which the lighting is switched on and off manually. This switch needs no supply line at all and can be fitted to the wall or the like without any electrical cable installation work.
When the switch is pressed, a high-frequency signal is emitted with the aid of the invention, to be precise without electric current being fed to this switch externally. A receiver fitted somewhere in the room, e.g. in the vicinity of the lamp, responds to the highfrequency signal and switches this lighting on and off in a wirefree, remote-controlled manner. Figure 2 schematically shows the structure of that part of a wirefree switch with radio signals which encompasses the essential concepts of the invention, said switch using process energy in accordance with the invention.
Finger pressure P is applied to the converter 10 (like a conventional pressure switch) and this pressure P generates a piezoelectric voltage in the in this case piezoelectric element of the converter 10. Suitable piezoelectric materials for such converters are, in addition to those mentioned for the electroacoustic transducers, in particular also PVDF (polyvinylidenedifluoride) and ferroelectric liquid-crystalline elastomers
(FLCE)
Such a switch can also be designed as an actuator by means of which an HF signal is generated and released, on which an information item concerning an ambient parameter can be impressed by means of the coding.
What is particularly suitable for generating a high piezoelectric voltage is a mechanical actuating apparatus with a beyond dead center spring, which, when loaded beyond dead center, acts abruptly with the set (mechanical) prestressed on the converter.
GR 97 P 1152 9 The converter 10 integrally or supplementarily comprises an electrical charging capacitance 10', which stores the generated or separated charges until triggering of the nonlinear element. The internal capacitance of piezoelectric or pyroelectric converters may be sufficient for this purpose.
In the circuit illustrated, a spark gap, for example, is provided as the nonlinear element 11, a sparkover taking place in said spark gap at the instant at which the piezoelectrically generated voltage has risen sufficiently high.
Such a spark gap fulfills the condition of an electrical (current) breakdown occurring e.g. in the nanoseconds range for the purpose of conversion into high-frequency energy, said condition having to be fulfilled for the functioning of the invention. As an alternative, as already mentioned, it is also possible to use other elements having a correspondingly rapid breakdown behavior.
The current of this sparkover passes through an inductance element, e.g. a broadband filter 20, in order to close the circuit. The voltage drop occurring in this inductance element 20 feeds the interdigital structure 22 (converter electrodes) of a surface acoustic wave filter 21, in which, as is known, a mechanical/acoustic wave is generated. The coding may be effected by a specific configuration of the interdigital structure on the input and/or output side of the filter. It is also possible to provide a pattern 23 of reflector strips which is arranged in accordance with a coding, the "echos" of which reflector strips form the coding. If a cavity is formed in the filter, a resonant oscillation can form, the precise frequency of which forms the coding. The coded signal is obtained at the filter output.
In the exemplary embodiment, the interaction of the interdigital structure and the reflector strips leads, as is known, to the above-described high- Sfrequency radio signal (which is in this case coded 9a with the code of the structure 23) occurring at the GR 97 P 1152 10 dipoles of the antenna 24 represented and being emitted to the abovementioned receiver. A surface wave arrangement operating as a reflective delay line supplies a coding in the time domain and an arrangement operating as a resonator (not illustrated in the figure) supplies a coding in the frequency domain. In this case, too, the coding can be performed as a function of an ambient parameter.
Figure 2 suffices once again for describing another embodiment of the invention. In the case of an embodiment for using thermal process energy, the converter 10 is, for example, a pyroelectric body (pyroelement) provided with electrodes. For this embodiment, the arrow P represents the feeding of thermal energy. The use according to the invention requires this thermal primary energy to have an e.g.
temporal temperature gradient. This is the case e.g.
with radiators (such as those used to heat rooms) with thermostatic regulation which effects fluctuations in the temperature of the radiator in the range of a few degrees Kelvin which are entirely sufficient (although surprisingly so) for the purposes according to the invention. In the case of this described embodiment, the converter 10 alternately undergoes heating and cooling, which leads to the formation of voltage of changing magnitude and polarity across the pyroelement.
The nonlinear element, which may again be a spark gap in this case, too, has the effect that when a specific (positive or negative) voltage change is reached, a sparkover takes place which triggers the processes which have already been described above with regard to the piezoelectric embodiment.
An application which is of particular interest in this regard is the remote acquisition of heat consumption data of room heating systems, which is known per se and has operated with a different supply of energy heretofore. An embodiment as described in accordance with the principle of the invention can even be used doubly advantageously for this, namely without GR 97 P 1152 11 the supply of electrical energy. The second advantage is that, in a manner which is fundamentally known per se, the surface wave element 21 can also be used for direct temperature measurement. The center frequency or propagation time of the narrowband high-frequency output signal of the surface wave converter is or can be (made) temperature-sensitive. If this surface wave element is thermally connected to the radiator, for example, the embodiment according to the invention makes it possible, in one unit, both to measure the temperature and to generate, with heat fed in, the necessary electrical energy for the high-frequency transmission operation effected in accordance with the invention. Each signal thus indicates a temperature change or a switching operation and simultaneously supplies the corresponding temperature acting on the converter (pyroelement). It is also possible to use the thermal energy only for transformation into the HF pulse but to perform the coding as a function of an arbitrary other variable parameter in the surroundings of the arrangement.
An embodiment which uses process energy from acceleration-varied mechanical movements of a seismic mass can likewise be described using Figure 2. The converter then comprises said seismic mass and the arrow P symbolizes the mechanical energy supply which results in the oscillations of the seismic mass contained in the converter 10. This mechanical energy supply may be continuous alternating energy or else just one-off pulse energy in each case. By means of an eccentric, the energy of rotating objects can also be transformed into an HF signal which can then be coded once again with statements concerning any desired ambient parameters. Vibrations can also be determined, and/or used for transformation, by means of seismic masses or by means of piezoelectric converters.
Applications of the invention diversely arise e.g. in the field of the operation of machines, GR 97 P 1152 12 of a variety of different types, e.g. of railroad carriages, road vehicles, rolling pallets and the like, for the purpose of monitoring or observing liquid, dissolved, gaseous or vaporous media of a variety of different types, or else of living entities to be monitored. Such an object or living entity, equipped with an arrangement according to the invention, can (without an electric battery being required) according to the invention emit coded high-frequency signals continuously (for as long as it moves or is moved) at time intervals. This can be used, on the basis of individually/differently coded HF signals at the respective objects or living entities, to distinguish these from one another remotely and, at the same time, to acquire their acceleration or movement data, temperature or other state. In the case of living entities, e.g. the movement activity of grazing animals, children or other persons in need of looking after or monitoring could thus be detected automatically. It is possible, for example, to set a specific limit value for the movement activity in this case as well, the coded signal being triggered or emitted when said activity is exceeded or undershot.
It is possible to use arrangements according to the invention for the automatic detection of specific thermal or mechanical) limit loads, which arrangements generate an HF signal and forward it in a wirefree manner to a receiving station or to a monitoring device only when said limit load is reached.
Simple monitoring of physical quantities which is active only as required is thus possible. The level of the limit load may be given by the response point of the nonlinear element or of the converter or be variably adjustable. A mechanical limit load can also be set by an additional prestressed spring which enables the (piezoelectric) converter to respond only when the prestressed force is reached. Thus, it is also possible to realize an automatic weight control which, when a GR 97 P 1152 13specific weight is undershot or exceeded, transmits this information automatically by means of a coded signal to a receiver or monitoring device. A change in weight can also be detected in this way. The arrangement according to the invention can thus also be used for the purpose of monitoring against theft.
Figures 3 and 4 show the configuration of an arrangement according to the invention which is of integrated construction and can be used as a calorimeter. 101 designates a laminar substrate body 1 cm 2 in size) having (inter alia) a pyroelectric property. By way of example, this may be a ceramic made of barium titanate, lead zirconate titanate or the like or else a (mono)crystalline material made of lithium niobate, lithium tantalate or the like. Two planar electrodes 41 and 42 are provided on the two lamina surface and a pyroelectric voltage that has been generated can be picked off at said electrodes.
In the second variant according to Figure 4b, a piezoelectric lamina 110 is arranged, e.g. bonded, on the substrate lamina 101, and is used for a surface wave arrangement (still to be described) and further functions. An optimized embodiment is the embodiment variant of Figure 4a, in which this piezoelectric lamina 110 is an integral region of the substrate lamina 101, presupposing that the pyroelectric material of the substrate lamina 101 additionally has a piezoelectric property as well at least in this region (and is also suitable for a surface wave arrangement), as is the case with lithium niobate, lithium tantalate and similar (monocrystalline) material.
For the sake of completeness, it shall be pointed out that, for the principle of the variant according to Figure 4b, the piezoelectric lamina 110 may, merely in an electrically connected manner, locally also be positioned separately from the laminar body 101, GR 97 P 1152 14e.g. if the lamina 110 is intended to be thermally insulated from the body 101. The invention's principle of converting the thermal energy into a high-frequency signal is fully functional in a variant of this type as well. The advantage of thermal coupling between the pyroelectric body 101 and the piezoelectric lamina 110 of the surface wave arrangement in respect of the possibility, associated therewith, of measuring the respective temperature value will be discussed further below. With regard to that, too, the use of an integral one-piece lamina as substrate 101 and lamina 110 for the surface wave arrangement, to be precise made of monocrystalline lithium tantalate, lithium niobate and the like, is of particular interest for the invention.
As illustrated in Figures 4a and 4b, the (bottom) rear side of the substrate body 101 is metallized preferably over the whole area, e.g. with aluminum The opposite, top side of the substrate body 101 is preferably likewise metallized (41) over the whole area in the variant according to Figure 4b.
In the variant according to Figure 4a, that portion of the substrate body 101 which in this case acts/serves functionally as the piezoelectric lamina 110 is cut out in the top metallization layer, specifically in order to place the further structures that will be described below in this cut-out area. In the variant according to Figure 4b, these structures are arranged on the separate lamina 110. Decoupling of mechanical-thermal stresses between the parts 101 and 110 is obtained if the lamina 110 is instead fastened on the body 101 by means of bonding wires that are necessary in any case.
13 and 14 respectively designate an electrode for a spark gap, which electrodes, as evident from the figures, are opposite one another with tips facing one another. The spark electrode 13 is electrically connected to the metallization layer 41. The spark electrode 14, as counterelectrode, is electrically connected to a metallization layer 15, which, GR 97 P 1152 for its part, is connected to a ground terminal 18 via lines and an inductor coil 19 (to be described in further detail), which ground terminal is in turn connected to the rear metallization layer 42 of the substrate 101. If a pyroelectric voltage is produced between the two electrodes 41 and 42, then it is present between the spark electrodes 13 and 14 and, on account of the nonlinear striking characteristic curve of this spark gap, the sparkover takes place only above an accumulated pyroelectric voltage value predetermined by the geometry of the spark electrodes 13 and 14. The abovementioned inductor 19 serves as DC line/low-pass filter. This inductor is preferably a meander structure or spiral structure applied as conductor strip to the surface of the lamina 110.
The temperature can also be measured simultaneously with, in particular, the illustrated and described first variant (Figure 4a) of the embodiment of an apparatus according to the invention. The substrate 101 and the lamina 110 functionally contained therein proportionally is coupled thermally to the heat source in any case on account of the pyroelectric effect. In other words, the region 110 of the surface wave structure 22/23 assumes the temperature of the radiator that is intended to be measured by means of the apparatus according to the invention.
The SW component generates a high-frequency signal that is dependent on the temperature. In other words, the emitted coded signal contains the information of the instantaneous temperature of the lamina (and thus of the radiator). At the reception location or in a receiving and evaluation unit, it is possible in this way, from the wave emitted, for the radiator temperature to be determined from the coded signal. In order to achieve this in the second variant, the separate lamina 110 in that case is thermally coupled separately to the heat source (the radiator or ~the like) GR 97 P 1152 16 By appropriately dimensioning the spark gap of the electrodes 13 and 14 and the thermal contact between the apparatus and the heat source (the radiator), that is to say by dimensioning the inflow of heat into the pyroelectric substrate 10, it is possible to choose or determine a predeterminable time sequence of successive instances of spark triggering. This affords the timing of the emission of signals from the antenna 24. Since the central receiving station has to record a multiplicity of such measurement points, that is to say incoming signals from different measurement points, it would be intrinsically necessary to temporally coordinate the signal emission of the individual measurement points. In actual fact, however, the situation is such that the central station has to receive a transmission pulse lasting only microseconds from the individual measurements points, that is to say the timing ratio of transmission pulse to temporal pulse interval is extremely small. It is therefore extremely unlikely that the emission from two different measurement points of this type will coincide, and no unnecessary electrosmog is produced.
The invention provides coding in particular with the pattern of the reflector structure 23 on the SW component. As is known from such strip patterns, the variety of possible codes is extraordinarily large. The identification of an individual measurement apparatus of this type by the central station is straightforward using an apparatus according to the invention.
The arrangement according to the invention can thus be accommodated in an integrated manner on an extremely small substrate area 101. It is thus handy and can be fitted without difficulty at very diverse, even inaccessible, locations. The integrated design means that the arrangement can also be produced costeffectively. The example that has been explained here for a calorimeter can also be applied without difficulty to corresponding piezoelectric elements or other ceramic converters 10, or converters 10 fabricated 16a from semiconductor, for the primary energy to be used.
GR 97 P 1152 17 A system operating with an arrangement like the arrangement according to the invention includes the radio receiving station with signal evaluation that has already been mentioned a number of times. Within this system, there is no need for a wire connection between the arrangement and the receiving station and the arrangement itself need not be supplied with electrical energy externally, even though it does not contain an electric battery. However, a special case shall be pointed out in which an arrangement which makes use of the invention does in fact contain a chargeable battery, but the latter is repeatedly charged (without electrical energy being supplied externally) during the time sequence from low-frequency electrical energy, as defined here, generated in accordance with the invention. The arrangement thus gains autonomy which is based entirely on the use of the invention.
GR 97 P 1152 18 List of reference symbols 11 12 13/14 19 20 22 23 24 41 42 101 110 Converter Transformer of low-frequency frequency energy Filter/coding device Spark electrodes Metallization layer Inductor Inductance element Interdigital converter Reflection strip Antennas Top electrode Bottom electrode Substrate Piezoelectric lamina into high-

Claims (22)

1. Arrangement for generating coded high- frequency signals, having a converter which converts a non- electrical primary energy available from a process or from the surroundings of the arrangement into low- frequency electrical energy, an element (11) with a nonlinear characteristic curve for converting the low-frequency electrical energy into high-frequency electrical energy, in the form of a high-frequency signal, a coding device (23) for generating a coded signal from the high-frequency electrical energy, and a filter (12) for selecting a narrowband signal from the high-frequency electrical energy, said filter being arranged between the element (11) and the coding device or having a coding device having corresponding additional filter properties.
2. Arrangement according to Claim i, in which the coding device (12, 23) is sensitive with respect to at least one ambient parameter, and in which an information item concerning the nature and/or size of this ambient parameter is impressed on the coded signal.
3. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 or 2, in which the converter (10) is designed to convert a mechanical primary energy into electrical energy.
4. Arrangement according to Claim 3, in which the converter (10) is designed as a piezoelectric element, as an induction device, in particular with a magnet and electrical coil, or for generating electrostatic charge. AMENDED SHEET GR 97 P 1152 P 20 PCT/DE98/00403 Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 or 2, in which the converter (10) is designed to convert thermal primary energy with a temporal or local gradient into electrical energy.
6. Arrangement according to Claim in which the converter (10) is designed as a pyroelectric element (101) or as a thermoelement arrangement.
7. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 3, in which the converter (10) is designed as a radiation-sensitive component for IR, visible light or UV.
8. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 7, in which a discharge element (13, 14) is provided as the element (11) with a nonlinear characteristic curve.
9. Arrangement according to Claim 8, in which a spark gap or a gas discharge tube is provided as the discharge element (13, 14) Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 7, in which a semiconductor component which exhibits a rapid change in resistance at a limiting voltage is provided as the element (11) with a nonlinear characteristic curve.
11. Arrangement according to Claim in which a diode operating at reverse breakdown, a varactor diode, an avalanche semiconductor element or a thyristor is provided as the element (11)
12. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 7, in which a relay is provided as the element (11) with a nonlinear characteristic curve.
13. Arrangement according to Claim 12, AMENDED SHEET GR 97 P 1152 P 21 PCT/DE98/00403 in which the relay is designed as a silicon microrelay or as a relay with a piezoelectric reed
14. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 13, in which an electroacoustic transducer (110) is provided as the filter (12) and/or as the coding device. Arrangement according to Claim 14, in which the electroacoustic transducer is designed as an SW arrangement (110) or as an arrangement operating with shear waves or with waves near the surface.
16. Arrangement according to Claim in which the SW arrangement (110) is designed as a resonator arrangement, as a delay line, as a dispersive delay line or as a tapped delay line.
17. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 16, in which the coding device (12) is designed to carry out pulse compression for the purpose of transmitting the coded signal in a manner immune to interference.
18. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 14, in which a dielectric filter, a mechanical filter, a ceramic filter, a coaxial ceramic filter, a bulk oscillator or an LC filter is provided as the filter (12)
19. Arrangement according to one of Claims 1 to 18, which is coupled to an antenna (24) for emitting the coded signal and for driving/triggering a receiving device. Method for generating coded high-frequency radio signals by conversion of a non-electrical primary energy available from a process or from the surroundings of the arrangement AMENDED SHEET GR 97 P 1152 P 22 PCT/DE98/00403 into low-frequency electrical energy by means of friction, piezoelectric, pyroelectric, thermoelectric, photoelectric, photovoltaic or electrodynamic effect, conversion of this low-frequency electrical energy into high-frequency electrical energy by means of an element (11) with a nonlinear characteristic curve, if appropriate, filtering of a narrowband high-frequency signal out from a broader-band high- frequency energy, and impression of a coding on the narrowband high-frequency signal
21. Method according to Claim in which a coding device which is sensitive to at least one ambient parameter is used, which coding device generates the coding of the narrowband high-frequency signal as a function of the nature or size of the ambient parameter.
22. Method according to Claim 20 or 21, in which the ambient parameter that acts on the coding device is a force, a pressure, a temperature, a radiation, a sudden impedance change, the nature or concentration of gases, liquids, vapors, chemical or biological substances, a coding of the narrowband high- frequency signal that is dependent on the ambient parameter [lacuna] generated.
23. Use of the apparatus according to one of Claims 1 to 19 as a switch for an electrical apparatus that is switchable and/or responsive by radio.
24. Use of the apparatus according to one of Claims 1 to 19 for the radio transmission of coded signals specific to the transmitter to a monitoring device. AMENDED SHEET -23- Use of the apparatus according to one of claims 1 to 19 as an active sensor, without an additional power supply, for an ambient parameter with wirefree data communication.
26. An arrangement for generating coded high frequency signals substantially as herein described with reference to Figs. 1 to 4b.
27. A method for generating coded high-frequency radio signals substantially as herein described with reference to Figs. 1 to 4b. 0 *:000: S 0 0O 0 DATED this Eleventh Day of August 1999 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Patent Attorneys for the Applicant SPRUSON FERGUSON .555 o 0* 0@* S 0 S S S [R:\LIBW]07649.doc:IAD
AU67171/98A 1997-02-12 1998-02-12 Arrangement and method for generating coded high-frequency signals Ceased AU726789B2 (en)

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